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An Alliance for Insecurity?

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U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson at a press conference in Mexico City in February. (U.S. Department of State)

By: Hillary Goodfriend

This week, the leaders of Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador are gathering in Miami with Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin for a “Conference on Prosperity and Security in Central America.” The conference, co-hosted by the United States and Mexico, seeks to revamp strategies designed to stem the tide of mass migration from Central America’s Northern Triangle nations by addressing the root causes of poverty and insecurity.

The meeting occurs amidst fraught circumstances, as Trump’s proposed 2018 budget threatens to slash U.S. development aid to the Northern Triangle while doubling down on security and pro-investment policies that have already wrought significant damages in the region. The meeting is the first of its kind to be held during the Trump presidency, and it appears to portend a shift from bad to worse for U.S. policy in Central America.

In a Spanish-language statement signed by over 50 organizations and coalitions from across Mexico, Central America and the United States last month, groups warn that “everything suggests that the central point of this Conference is to make substantial modifications to the Alliance for Prosperity Plan for the Central American Northern Triangle, reformulating it to promote greater private investment from the U.S., intensify official arms and military equipment trade and extend the Southern Command Task Forces into Guatemala and venturing into Mexico.”

A New Name for an Old Model: The Alliance for Prosperity under Obama

In the summer of 2014, Central America was thrust back into the U.S. spotlight for the first time since the brutal U.S.-backed wars of the 1980s. During the so-called “child migrant crisis,” 70,000 unaccompanied children and an equal number of mothers and children arrived seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border, as images of mothers and children fleeing poverty, gang violence, and domestic abuse filled the headlines. For a moment, the North American public was confronted with the bitter legacy of U.S. financing, training and arming genocidal dictators, supporting corrupt oligarchs and promoting devastating deregulation and privatization regimes in the region.

Any reckoning with the ravages of imperialism was short-lived, however, and the crisis became an opportunity for the U.S. to continue to deepen a longstanding U.S. agenda in Central America, first under President Obama and now under President Trump. This policy was molded into the Alliance for Prosperity (APP) in the Northern Triangle of Central America, a document released by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) along with the governments of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador in late 2014.

While claiming to advance a new strategy, the U.S.’s funding agenda has continued to prioritize security and military assistance and touted privatization and foreign direct investment as the key to fueling development in the region.

The APP calls for investment in economic opportunities, human capital, citizen security, and strengthening institutions. These bland, technocratic terms, however, disguise a radical, if familiar, economic program, one that the U.S. has been seeking to advance along with local elites for decades. The plan builds on other attempts to secure U.S. corporate and military interests in the region – from the Cold War-era Alliance for Progress to the failed Plan Pueblo Panama.

The bulk of the Plan centers on further liberalization at the expense of workers, public services and the environment: it advocates for privatizations through public-private partnerships, free-trade zones with special regulatory and fiscal exemptions for private foreign investors, the maximization of eight “logistical corridors” connecting ports and cities across the region, and the exploitation of natural gas resources.

At the 2015 Summit of the Americas, 75 civil society organizations signed a letter to the Presidents of the U.S., Mexico, and the Northern Triangle countries warning that, “the Plan reinforces the same economic policies that have resulted in skyrocketing inequality, widespread abuse of workers’ rights and increased violence against labor leaders, and forced displacement throughout Mesoamerica.”

Vice President Joe Biden called the White House strategy a Plan Colombia for Central America, drawing alarm from human rights advocates and regional solidarity groups who noted Plan Colombia’s devastating legacy of state violence and mass displacement.

From the outset, blocking migration was a key component. Congress conditioned 25% of the $750 million approved in Obama’s FY2016 budget request both on the Northern Triangle country’s commitment to cooperating with escalating deportations, further “securing” their borders, and running media campaigns to dissuade its citizens from leaving. The U.S. also pressured Mexico to scale up its immigration enforcement—essentially outsourcing the work of criminalizing, jailing and deporting Central American migrants—through Plan Frontera Sur, resulting in a major spike in deportations from Mexico, which now outpace US deportations of Central Americans. It has also made migrants more vulnerable to robberies, rapes, extortions and kidnappings by driving them from established routes into increasingly dangerous territories. Mexican authorities are routinely implicated in abuses against migrants in transit and asylum-seekers.

Together with Mexico, the Obama administration worked to push border militarization ever southwards. In 2016, for example, a U.S. -backed Tri-National Anti-Gang Task Force was established in the Northern Triangle to focus on gangs and trafficking of arms, drugs, vehicles, and humans. These initiatives are designed to combat legitimate challenges posed by narcotrafficking and organized crime, but they raise serious questions about the fate of migrants, refugees and even tourists who encounter these units. Under the Central America-4 Border Control agreement, citizens from El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala and Nicaragua enjoy the freedom to travel without a passport between all four Central American nations, yet in 2016, Guatemala’s U.S.-trained border agents refused entry to 400 Salvadorans on suspicion of being gang members.

A Hardened Policy Under Trump

Under Obama, Central American governments were incentivized to accept U.S. economic and security strategies with the promise of hundreds of millions of dollars in development aid. In reality, they appear to have little choice. The outsized economic and political influence that the U.S. exerts leaves little room for maneuver from the impoverished Northern Triangle nations.

The Trump administration, however, prefers the stick to the carrot. Under the leadership of Department of Homeland Security Secretary and former U.S. Southern Command Chief John Kelly, the administration has proposed major cuts to foreign aid and refugee assistance, and is leaning on Mexico to do more of the U.S.’ dirty work of detaining, screening and deporting Central Americans, as well as to further militarize its southern border with Guatemala and train Central American security forces.

Under Trump, the State Department has taken a back seat to the Department of Homeland Security–which is subject to much less oversight or public scrutiny—in shaping US-Central America policy. Kelly’s leadership, along with the FY2018 budget request’s preference for defense over diplomacy, suggests a troubling escalation of the militarization of U.S. foreign policy, one that will only make Central American families forced to undertake the perilous journey northward ever more vulnerable.

Trump’s 2018 budget proposes a massive reduction in aid worldwide, with Central America’s economic assistance down 39% from its peak in 2016. The proposal slashes the U.S. Agency for International Development’s (USAID) budget by 75% and eliminates U.S. funding for the IDB. Refugee services would be cut by 31%, and the Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance Fund, designed to help respond to unanticipated crises, would get nothing at all. Aid to Mexico would be cut in half. At the same time, the administration wants to raise defense spending by 10% and build 74 miles of border wall at USD$21 million per mile. The Trump administration isn’t offering the Northern Triangle much, but it’s threatening plenty. Two weeks before the Miami conference, Kelly suggested he may move to end the Temporary Protected Status that shields 263,000 Salvadorans and 86,000 Hondurans in the U.S. from deportation. Mexico, in turn, hopes to score points with the U.S. in exchange for a favorable outcome to the threatened renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

In lieu of development aid, the Trump administration is doubling down on the Alliance for Prosperity’s emphasis on attracting private foreign investment to Central America. Tillerson remarks described the Miami conference as an event to discuss “how we can bring more private capital into investment opportunities in Central and Latin America.” A day before the official activities, the IDB and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is bringing together corporations including Monsanto, Coca Cola and Walmart to discuss investment opportunities. Day one of the conference is being organized by the State Department and held at Florida International University; activities will be similarly dedicated to further opening up the Northern Triangle’s resources and workforce to foreign corporations. June 16th is devoted to security, and will be held at the US Southern Command headquarters. Secretary Tillerson will only participate in June 15th’s events, leaving the rest of the conference to Secretary Kelly.

In addition to the multinational private sector actors invited to attend, representatives from the European Union, Canada, Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica and other nations will participate in the conference. Civil society groups representing the workers, migrants and communities most impacted by these policy proposals, however, are notably absent.

Civil Society Resists

Those organizing on the frontlines against imperialism, neoliberalism and militarization in Central America have no illusions about the threats that the new administration poses. In a letter to the State Department delivered ahead of the event, over 100 human rights, environmental, labor, humanitarian and faith organizations worldwide expressed concern “with the lack of consultation with civil society organizations from Mexico and Central America in the preparation for this conference” and its limited economic and security focus.

“Militarized approaches to law enforcement put Central American citizens at risk and do not build sustainable approaches,” the groups write, noting that, “Community leaders who have defended their lands against the development of infrastructure or extractive projects are at risk in this region; Guatemala and Honduras rank among the most dangerous countries in the world for environmental defenders. An approach focusing on large-scale private sector investment also sidelines the importance of supporting small farmers and community-based initiatives for sustainable development which are crucial to families’ livelihoods in rural areas.”

Although Trump’s plans for Central America do not represent a dramatic departure from those of his predecessor, they constitute a dangerous escalation of enduring strategies that privilege the movement of capital and commodities over human beings.

The consequences of such policies are devastating not only to migrants in transit, but also to workers in Central America who labor in increasingly precarious conditions, and to immigrants in the U.S. who are made more vulnerable to exploitation by criminalization. The result is a vicious neoliberal cycle of economic hardship, migration and deportation that feeds the engorged industries of private prisons and defense contractors, while starving the region of the sustainable, inclusive and equitable development it desperately needs. Whatever agreements the Miami conference produces, those least likely to benefit are the Central America’s working-class majorities.

Hilary Goodfriend is a US-born researcher located in San Salvador, El Salvador. She writes about the impacts of US policies in the region.

This article was originally co-published as part of a collaboration between NACLA and Jacobin on 06/14/2017.

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